This was the result of great efforts in the field of deep drilling, an area in which Iraq has much experience and specialized personnel, as well as machinery that is the most advanced and sophisticated in the region.
After 2003, Iraqi ports faced a formidable challenge in the shallow waters in the Umm Qasr shipping channel. However, the channel has been increased in depth to record levels and can now receive giant ships that require anchoring depths of up to 11 meters.
Port officials in Iraq take pride in the considerable improvement in the quality of services provided to ships that use the country's navigational channels. This has resulted in a significant increase in revenues and led many transport companies to show interest in Iraqi ports.
Statistics from the Iraqi Ministry of Transport indicate a decrease in the entry of goods through land ports, because of transport companies' desire to use Umm Qasr and affiliated ports in Basra.
Until 2006, the port of Umm Qasr depended on piecemeal transportation. Giant ships coming from east Asia would moor in the port of Dubai, and then their cargo would be unloaded into small transport ships heading to Umm Qasr, because the port could not handle large ships. Now, however, the port receives these ships directly and unloads them in record speed.
In one case, the port succeeded in unloading 60,000 tons of wheat for the Iraqi Trade Ministry in seven days, a feat that would take Gulf ports nine or more, according to Iraqi port officials.
Iraqi ports faced a major challenge when some of the companies that had won oil contracts in Iraq wanted to bring their equipment into the country through alternative ports in the region. Iraqi officials said that the port of Umm Qasr took this responsibility upon itself and succeeded impressively. During this period, oil equipment weighing as much as 320 tons was received in the port of Umm Qasr, a precedent for Iraqi ports and even for many ports in the region.



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